HomeNewsOpinionWhy is Pakistan pushing the envelope on Kashmir?

Why is Pakistan pushing the envelope on Kashmir?

Pakistan is smart enough to get itself some mileage from China’s anti-India thrust, both on the ground and in diplomacy at a time when its Kashmir policy is in disarray. However, all this comes at a price, and not just diplomatic

August 12, 2020 / 14:28 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Representative image
Representative image

Pakistani officials scored one possible goal on their frenetic campaign to highlight the Kashmir issue one year after the state of Jammu & Kashmir was bifurcated into two union territories. After renaming a road, a multiplicity of speeches, and the issuing of a preposterous map that laid claim to various parts of India, Islamabad was finally able to point with pride to some specific actions.

For one, the president-elect to the 75th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Volkan Bozkir chose to comment on Kashmir during his recent visit to Pakistan. Expectedly, there was a fiery speech by former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, and a statement of support from Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Story continues below Advertisement

A third was a little more puzzling. Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi demanded that the 57-member Saudi Arabia-headed Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) either convene a session on Kashmir, or Pakistan would split the organisation to include Islamic states ready to stand by it. That was unprecedented. Pakistani diplomats are usually on over drive on Kashmir, since it could make or break their careers. This time however, they seem to be pushing the envelope.

First off, are the comments of Bozkir, who is the first Turkish citizen to hold the office of President of the UNGA, and elected from the WEOG Group (Western European and Other Countries). His candidature is not surprising. His vision statement spells out the centrality of a “rules-based international system” — the new language that implies a refusal to accept Chinese hegemonic behaviour in the Indian Ocean Region.